To link to this object, paste this link in email, IM or documentTo embed this object, paste this HTML in website

Anita Hamilton, (cq), 79, in the backyard of the home she built where her daughter still resides, 7960 S. Santa Fe Drive, Littleton, Colo., Thursday July 6, 2006. She was employed at COBUSCO, (Colorado Builder Supply Company), at the time, December 19, 1942, she was employed to gauge bullets as they were manufactured. She was working graveyard and around 2am asked to take the night off and went home. Later in the morning she learned her work place had exploded. She said she would have been mamed or killed based on where she worked. (information from the subject). She now lives in Oklahoma. (STEVEN R. NICKERSON / ROCKY MOUNTAIN NEWS)**Anita Hamilton (cq all)**

Anita Hamilton, (cq), 79, in the backyard of the home she built where her daughter still resides, 7960 S. Santa Fe Drive, Littleton, Colo., Thursday July 6, 2006. She was employed at COBUSCO, (Colorado Builder Supply Company), at the time, December 19, 1942, she was employed to gauge bullets as they were manufactured. She was working graveyard and around 2am asked to take the night off and went home. Later in the morning she learned her work place had exploded. She said she would have been mamed or killed based on where she worked. (information from the subject). She now lives in Oklahoma. (STEVEN R. NICKERSON / ROCKY MOUNTAIN NEWS)**Anita Hamilton (cq all)**

Published caption / Description

Anita Hamilton, 79, holds a scrapbook in the backyard of her daughter's Littleton home. The Oklahoma resident came back to Colorado to learn more about a 1942 explosion at the ammunition factory where she was working at the time.

Other descriptive information

SRN;Anita Hamilton, (cq), 79, in the backyard of the home she built where her daughter still resides, 7960 S. Santa Fe Drive, Littleton, Colo., Thursday July 6, 2006. She was employed at COBUSCO, (Colorado Builder Supply Company), at the time, December 19, 1942, she was employed to gauge bullets as they were manufactured. She was working graveyard and around 2am asked to take the night off and went home. Later in the morning she learned her work place had exploded. She said she would have been mamed or killed based on where she worked. (information from the subject). She now lives in Oklahoma. (STEVEN R. NICKERSON / ROCKY MOUNTAIN NEWS)**Anita Hamilton (cq all)**

Date assigned by RMN

2006-07-21 04:05:50

Camera date stamp

2006:07:06 14:41:42

Copyright

Restrictions applying to use or reproduction of this image available from the Western History/Genealogy Dept., Denver Public Library.

Post a Comment for Anita Hamilton, (cq), 79, in the backyard of the home she built where her daughter still resides, 7960 S. Santa Fe Drive, Littleton, Colo., Thursday July 6, 2006. She was employed at COBUSCO, (Colorado Builder Supply Company), at the time, December 19, 1942, she was employed to gauge bullets as they were manufactured. She was working graveyard and around 2am asked to take the night off and went home. Later in the morning she learned her work place had exploded. She said she would have been mamed or killed based on where she worked. (information from the subject). She now lives in Oklahoma. (STEVEN R. NICKERSON / ROCKY MOUNTAIN NEWS)**Anita Hamilton (cq all)**